| Literature DB >> 26462691 |
Nina Deisig1, Fabienne Dupuy2, Sylvia Anton3, Michel Renou4.
Abstract
Insects communicating with pheromones, be it sex- or aggregation pheromones, are confronted with an olfactory environment rich in a diversity of volatile organic compounds of which plants are the main releaser. Certain of these volatiles can represent behaviorally relevant information, such as indications about host- or non-host plants; others will provide essentially a rich odor background out of which the behaviorally relevant information needs to be extracted. In an attempt to disentangle mechanisms of pheromone communication in a rich olfactory environment, which might underlie interactions between intraspecific signals and a background, we will summarize recent literature on pheromone/plant volatile interactions. Starting from molecular mechanisms, describing the peripheral detection and central nervous integration of pheromone-plant volatile mixtures, we will end with behavioral output in response to such mixtures and its plasticity.Entities:
Keywords: mixture processing; neural mechanisms; odor interactions; orientation behavior; plant odor; sex pheromone
Year: 2014 PMID: 26462691 PMCID: PMC4592597 DOI: 10.3390/insects5020399
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Insects ISSN: 2075-4450 Impact factor: 2.769
Figure 1Orientation of male moths towards the female-emitted sex pheromone in a natural environment. The pheromone (blue) is emitted in small amounts from a point source, an isolated female, whereas flower and green leaf volatiles (yellow and green) from host and non-host plants are highly variable and are often emitted in large amounts and from multiple sources. Detailed physical models for such complex signal combinations are missing but we can extrapolate that they result in a meandering but relatively narrow pheromone plume in a more dispersed, but still heterogeneous cloud of diverse plant volatiles. More homogenous clouds are probably found in highly simplified agro-ecosystems where plants of the same species, variety, and growing stage dominate over large surfaces.
Figure 2A background of a plant volatile affects the intensity and the dynamics of the responses to a pheromone pulse by specialist olfactory receptor neurons in moth antennae. Instantaneous spike frequencies calculated as the slope of a cumulative function [21] are shown over time for typical Phe-ORNs. In Spodoptera littoralis (Slit, upper row) pheromone specialized neurones respond to a short pulse of the main pheromone component (Z9,E11-14:Ac) by a step increase in their firing response (left); a prolonged stimulation with linalool does not increase spontaneous firing (middle); simultaneous presentation of linalool and pheromone results in reduced peak firing frequency, narrowing of the response and a post-background rebound. While linalool acts as an antagonist of pheromone reception in S. littoralis, it is a weak agonist in Agrotis ipsilon leading to weak activation as single stimulus and mixture suppression together with pheromone (Aips, middle row). The component of linden flower aroma, heptanal, strongly stimulates Pher-ORNs (agonism, Aips, lower row) in A. ipsilon but masks the response to a pheromone pulse. Red bars = pheromone stimulation; green bars = volatile plant compound stimulation. Graphs present the frequency curves averaged on responses recorded from 10 to 20 different sensilla. Horizontal scale bar 1 s, vertical scale bar 50 spikes/s. Data from [13,16].
Figure 3The Agrotis ipsilon brain and pheromone-plant odor interactions visualized in the antennal lobe by in vivo calcium imaging. (A) Schematic representation of the noctuid moth brain and (B) the antennal lobe. (C) False color-coded images of optically recorded antennal lobe activity. In response to different doses of heptanal (Hep 1, 10 and 100 μg), the behaviorally active sex pheromone blend (Phe) at 10 ng and the heptanal-pheromone blend mixture (Mix, containing 10 ng of pheromone blend and 1, 10 or 100 μg of heptanal). Hexane, the solvent of the pheromone, mineral oil (MinOil), the solvent of heptanal, as well as air, are control stimulations. All maps are scaled to the same minimum/maximum as indicated by the color scale and originate from a single five days-old male moth. AL antennal lobe, AN antennal nerve, CC central complex, La lamina, lCB lateral cell body cluster, Lo lobula, MBC mushroom body calyces, MBL mushroom body lobes, mCB medial cell body cluster, MGC macroglomerular complex, OG ordinary glomeruli.
Figure 4Interactions between pheromone and heptanal induce opposite effects in the response of neurons of the two sub-systems of the antennal lobe in Agrotis ipsilon. The different traces show examples of antennal lobe neuron responses to three olfactory stimulations (grey bar) (i.e., 1 ng of the sex pheromone, 100 μg of heptanal and the mixture of pheromone and heptanal) recorded intracellularly. (A) In the pheromonal sub-system (MGC), the neuron shown responds to the pheromone (blend) with a strong excitation followed by an inhibition phase (upper trace) and no or a weak response to heptanal. The presentation of heptanal together with the pheromone induces a reduced response, showing a suppressive effect (lower trace). (B) In the non-pheromonal sub-system (OG), neuronal responses are stronger for stimulation with heptanal (middle trace) than with pheromone (blend, upper trace). The responses to heptanal are further enhanced when adding the pheromone showing an additive mixture effect (lower trace).
Figure 5A change of odorant background modifies the orientation behavior of Spodoptera littoralis males towards their pheromone. Samples of 2-dimensional walking tracks were recorded with a locomotion compensator. Individual males were stimulated with the main pheromone component, Z9E11-14:Ac, for 2 min and their walking track was recorded showing active upwind walking activity (grey tracks). After 1 min, a plant volatile compound (linalool) was added to the pheromone carrying airflow (green track). Males showed a transitory change in their direction and speed at linalool onset (three examples). In turn, isoprene (red track) did not modify their walking activity. The black arrows indicate the direction of the airflow. Data are redrawn from [14].
Some reported cases of pheromone-plant odor interactions in non-lepidopteran insects.
| Insect group | species | Pheromone function | Plant odour type | Compounds | Effects | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Homoptera (various Aphids) |
| Sex pheromone (female-emitted) | Single host plant volatiles | Benzaldehyde, methyl salicylate | Increased catches to pheromone baited traps in field studies and increased specificity. | [ |
|
| Induced host plant volatiles | Adult-feeding induced green leaf volatiles. (Short chain esters) | [ | |||
| Coleoptera |
| Aggregation pheromone (male produced) | Blend of host plant volatiles | ( | Increased attraction in a sex-dependent manner | [ |
|
| Sex pheromone (female emitted) | Induced host plant volatiles | ( | Synergistic attraction of males | [ | |
| Aggregation pheromone involved in host colonization | Volatiles from non-host trees | Monoterpenes (α- and β-pinene, terpinolene, 3-carene) and green leaf alcohols, ( | Inhibition of attraction to pheromone | [ | ||
| Aggregation pheromone involved in reproduction | Natural material or volatiles from damaged host-plant | Short chain products of fermentation (ethyl acetate, acetoin) | Synergy | [ |